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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Associated Press reporters

California wildfire: two dead and 500 buildings destroyed as disaster intensifies

Two firefighters are dead and at least 500 buildings have been destroyed by a wildfire in a North Californian city, say officials.

Residents of Redding, a city of 92,000 about 100 miles south of the Oregon border, described a chaotic and congested getaway from a blaze that has so far claimed the lives of two firefighters.

 "I've never experienced something so terrifying in my life," said Liz Williams, who loaded two children in her car and then found herself locked in bumper-to-bumper traffic with neighbours trying to retreat from Lake Redding Estates.

"I didn't know if the fire was just going to jump out behind a bush and grab me and suck me in," Ms Williams said. "I wanted out of here."

The flames moved so fast that firefighters working in oven-like temperatures and bone-dry conditions had to drop efforts to battle the blaze at one point to help people escape.

The fire created at least two flaming tornados that toppled trees, shook firefighting equipment and busted truck windows, taking "down everything in its path," said Scott McLean, a spokesman for Cal Fire, the state agency responsible for fighting wildfires.

Fire officials warned that the blaze, which is believed to have been caused by a mechanical issue involving a vehicle, would probably burn deeper into urban areas before it could be contained.

Steve Hobson, a former firefighter, detailed his dramatic escape from the flames – in which he had to drive through walls of flaming embers.

"I didn't know if I'd make it, so I just got in the middle of the street, went down the middle of the street through the embers and the smoke and made it past," Mr Hobson said.

Mr Hobson's house survived, however.

Others' homes in the haphazard path of destruction were not so lucky. Where some houses stood unscathed, single walls or chimneys were all that remained of others.

"We're not fighting a fire," said Jonathan Cox, battalion chief with Cal Fire.

"We're trying to move people out of the path of it because it is now deadly, and it is now moving at speeds and in ways we have not seen before in this area," Mr Cox added.

Elsewhere in the state, large fires continued to burn outside Yosemite National Park and in the San Jacinto Mountains east of Los Angeles near Palm Springs.

Associated Press

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